Solar Panels Will Power UB Apartments WKBW-TV Buffalo Thu, 07 May 2009 14:44 PM PDT Hundreds of apartments on the University at Buffalo's North Campus will soon be powered by solar energy. "According to the National Weather Service, from May to November, Buffalo is the sunniest and driest city in the Northeast," UB President John Simpson said. | Emerging-Market Stocks Post Longest Winning Streak Since March Bloomberg Thu, 07 May 2009 14:43 PM PDT May 7 (Bloomberg) -- Emerging-market stocks gained for a seventh day, the longest rally since March, as increasing oil prices boosted energy producers and banks gained on speculation U.S. lenders wonât need as much capital as earlier projected. | Energy Conversion Devices cuts Q4 production EETimes Thu, 07 May 2009 14:40 PM PDT Solar power company Energy Conversion Devices Inc. said Thursday it had begun a temporary production furlough to bring supplies in line with demand and save $6 million in the fiscal fourth quarter. | Oil prices bounce above $58 per barrel Philippine Daily Inquirer Thu, 07 May 2009 14:39 PM PDT Oil prices soared close to six-month highs above $58 a barrel on Thursday, extending recent gains on hopes of a pickup in energy demand amid fresh signs of economic recovery. | Auto industry suppliers cross over to wind power San Francisco Chronicle Thu, 07 May 2009 14:38 PM PDT Pete Ostrander and the manufacturer he works for took a hard look at the auto industry four years ago, and neither liked what they saw. Automakers were pushing vendors like Merrill Technologies Group, where Ostrander works, to cut costs and, with the economic... Related: Wind power - Wind - Renewable - Energy - Business | Deputy PM holds talks with Cyprus minister Gulf Times Thu, 07 May 2009 14:37 PM PDT HE the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Energy and Industry Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiyah yesterday met the visiting Cyprus â Minister of Industry and Commerce, Antonis Paschalades and his accompanying delegation. | State regulators OK some Duke energy savings ideas The Greenville News Thu, 07 May 2009 14:31 PM PDT Regulators rejected Duke's "Save-a-Watt" program in February. That plan would encourage customers to lower their energy consumption through conservation but compensate by increasing energy bills. | | |
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